Partially Neutralizing Potency against Emerging Genotype I Virus among Children Received Formalin-Inactivated Japanese Encephalitis Virus Vaccine

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Abstract

Background: Genotype I (GI) Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) that replaced GIII virus has become the dominant circulating virus in Asia. Currently, all registered live and inactivated JEV vaccines are derived from genotype III viruses. In Taiwan, the compulsory JEV vaccination policy recommends that children receives four doses of formalin-inactivated Nakayama (GIII) JEV vaccine. Methodology/Principal Findings: To evaluate the influence of genotype replacement on the post-vaccination viral neutralizing ability by GIII and GI viruses, the small panel of vaccinated-children serum specimens was assembled, and the reciprocal 50% plaque-reduction neutralizing antibody titers (PRNT50) were measured against Nakayama vaccine strain, CJN GIII human brain isolate and TC2009-1 GI mosquito isolate. The seropositivity rate (PRNT50≥1:10) and geometric mean titers (GMT) against the TC2009-1 virus were the lowest among the three viruses. The protective threshold against the CJN and TC2009-1 viruses could only be achieved when the GMT against Nakayama virus was ≥1:20 or ≥1:80, respectively. Using undiluted vaccinees' sera, the enhancement of JEV infection in K562 cells was observed in some low or non-neutralizing serum specimens. Conclusions/Significance: Our preliminary study has shown that neutralizing antibodies, elicited by the mouse brain-derived and formalin-inactivated JEV Nakayama vaccine among a limited number of vaccinees, have reduced neutralizing capacity against circulating GI virus, but more detailed studies are needed to address the potential impact on the future vaccine policy.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Structural locations of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) envelope (E) protein variations. Amino acid variations between the Nakayama vaccine strain and the GIII brain-isolated CJN strain are indicated in blue, and variations between the Nakayama vaccine strain and the GI field-isolated TC2009-1 strain are indicated in both blue and red. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0001834.g001
  • Table 1. Geometric mean titers (GMT) of strain-specific neutralizing antibody against vaccine and field-isolated genotype III and I viruses among serum samples collected from children immunized with inactivated JEV Nakayama vaccine.
  • Figure 2. The seropositivity rate of children immunized with inactivated Nakayama JEV vaccine against JEVs. Seropositivity is defined by a reciprocal titer of $10 in a 50% plaque-reduction neutralization test using BHK-21 cells. Significantly different (P,.05) seropositivity rates against CJN or TC2009-1 as compared to that for Nakayama virus are indicated by asterisks. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0001834.g002
  • Table 2. Strain-specific protection threshold of inactivated Nakayama Japanese encephalitis virus vaccine.
  • Figure 3. Effects of children’s undiluted serum samples on viral yield of GI JEV from K562 cells. The magnitude of enhancement of viral yield is calculated as follows: Log10 (serum-treated viral titer/untreated viral titer). The K562 cells infected with labeled samples C86, TC36, B19, D7, D15, 113, I5 and I6, were subjected to infection rate analysis by flow cytometry (Figure 4). doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0001834.g003
  • Figure 4. Patterns of ADE in K562 cells infected by virus treated with serum samples. The virus control is GI TC2009-1 virus-infected K562 cells in the absence of serum samples. The ADE of TC2009-1 virus in K562 cells by using 1:100 diluted 4G2 monoclonal antibody as a positive ADE control and the serum samples collected from vaccinated children including C86, TC36, B19, I6, 113, D7, D15, and I5. The K562 cells were collected, stained with mouse anti-JEV HIAF, and analyzed for infection rate by flow cytometry. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0001834.g004

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Fan, Y. C., Chen, J. M., Chiu, H. C., Chen, Y. Y., Lin, J. W., Shih, C. C., … Chiou, S. S. (2012). Partially Neutralizing Potency against Emerging Genotype I Virus among Children Received Formalin-Inactivated Japanese Encephalitis Virus Vaccine. PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 6(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0001834

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